“Cadillac In The Swamp,” by SmokeHouse … (Blues / Florida Swamp Blues – Music to Your Ears–52)

in #music5 years ago (edited)

The deep, murky vocals and the sultry rhythms are as great as those of the Chicago blues masters at their best.

SmokeHouse – “Cadillac In The Swamp”

“Cadillac In The Swamp” (1995)  

This is the title track of an album that AllMusic.com lauded as “first-rate modern blues.”  Another reviewer described the blues of the band SmokeHouse as “simple, straight-forward and powerful.”  

Murky and Sultry 

The tune “Cadillac In The Swamp”  may be “modern,”  but the deep, murky vocals are reminiscent of the late great John Lee Hooker at his best. And the rhythms are as sultry as those of the Chicago blues masters Muddy Waters and Willie Dixon.    

Moreover, the steamy music of this swampy tune is complemented by a macabre Southern Gothic tale. Let’s call this music “dark blue.”    

According to “Living Blues”  magazine, “Cadillac In The Swamp”  was the “Best Album”  of 1995.   (Image source)

SmokeHouse

The band previously known as Smokehouse was formed in Florida in 1989, by Anthony “Packrat”  Thompson. The band has been active for most of the 30 years since then, and is now known as Packrat’s Smokehouse.  

Swamp Blues

Packrat’s Smokehouse has opened for and played with such great blues outfits as Jim Belushi and the Blues Brothers Band, Taj Mahal, Koko Taylor, and The Fabulous Thunderbirds.   

Packrat’s Smokehouse typifies the genre that they call “Florida Swamp Blues.”  And they call themselves “The Men of the Swamp.”  Let’s hope no crazed orangutans come around to drain this steamy swamp.   (Image source)

Ah, now let me tell y'all something here
Now, now this ain't no lie
Y'all come on over here
And let's sit by the fire
Way down south
Where the beetles and cottonmouth breed
I seen something down there, y'all
That took my breath away

I saw a black Cadillac
Cruising real slow
Way down the swamps
Where no man dare go
The windows went down slowly
There sat a chauffeur with no head
Well, I stood there trembling y'all
Never been so damned scared
(Chorus)

Whoa oh, that Cadillac, yeah
Whoa oh, down in the swamp
Ah, Lord

Thick fog rolled in
I could barely see the lights
And that old ghost Cadillac, y'all
Faded into the night
I ran home and told my daddy
Just what I seen
He reached for his knife, people
Never saw him look so damned mean
He said, Look a-here boy
It was 1952
It was late one night
Your mammy saw it too
(Chorus)

Well, your mammy got so scared
She packed up and moved away
And she swore to the Lord
She'd never come back to stay
It was about three days later
I went hunting that night
And I found yo mama dead, boy
Tire tracks right across her back
So my daddy grabbed his shotgun
He said, Boy, show me them tracks
Now, whatever you hear
You just don't look back
(Chorus)

He went down them swamps
With that old big dick hound
About 20 minutes later
That old hound began to sound
Five shots rung out
I was froze in my tracks
And I thought about what daddy said, y'all
So I didn't look back
That old hound kept running
With his tongue hung to the ground
That old ghost Cadillac, ya'll
Nowhere to be found
(Chorus)

I said, Hey, daddy
What happened to that old hound?
He said, That old Cadillac boy
Done done rode him down
That Cadillac killed yo mammy
And it's going to get me
So you get out of these swamps, boy
And set yourself free
That ghost Cadillac
You better hide
That ghost Cadillac, ya'll
Headless chauffeur inside
That ghost Cadillac
Patrolling them swamps
That ghost Cadillac
Blood stains in the trunk
Have mercy
Have mercy
Yeah lord.
        (Thanks to Kocegeorgiev Georgiev)   (Image source)
Lyrics by Anthony Thompson, courtesy of Don's Tunes – YouTube  
Reference – PackratsSmokeHouse.com
Reference – Last.fm

Into your ears … through 5 channels

 The various posts are categorized into 5 channels (Right-Click to see details)
         1 – “Music to Your Ears” (MTYE)
         2 – “Cover Versions”
         3 – “Honor Roll”
         4 – “Documentaries”
         5 – “Mock’n’Roll”

More “Music to Your Ears” ...

          Previous posts in this series – "MTYE posts 1–20"
          Previous posts in this series – "MTYE posts 21–40"

Links to my other series ...

          Lou Reed – "Anthology of Memorable Lyrics, Part 1"
          Lou Reed – "Anthology of Memorable Lyrics, Part 2"

          Great Lyrics, a compilation – “Part One – My Lyrics Posts 3~30”
          Great Lyrics, a compilation – “Part Two – My Lyrics Posts 31~60”  

          Vocab-Ability – "Introduction to Vocab-Ability"  
          Vocab-Ability – "Index"  to all Chapters and Sections  

          Notes from Under the Tatami Mats – "Part One – Notes 1~50"  
          Notes from Under the Tatami Mats – "Part Two – Notes 51~87"  
Sort:  

@majes.tytyty You have received a 100% upvote from @botreporter because this post did not use any bidbots and you have not used bidbots in the last 30 days!

Upvoting this comment will help keep this service running.

I adore the Blues, consider it a musical aspect full of passion, it contains the clamor of the voices that need to be heard and carry a deep message to people's hearts. This is another piece of collection, a living legend of "Cadillac in the swamp", contains that magic characteristic of the genre which allows to open the mind and reach levels of powerful powers. Applause for this emblematic Florida musical band and its contagious rhythm, at the height of the best ...
Thanks for sharing @majes.tytyty

"Long live the Blues"

Along with jazz, the blues are one of the iconic American music genres. To a great extent, blues are ignored nowadays.

But the blues live on, as they are the heart of rock'n'roll.
Long live the blues.

This is a fine song. I enjoyed the softness of the song, although the lyrics are scary. Thanks for sharing.

Ya, sultry blues, but also rather dark. But remember, it's only a story!

Hahaha indeed it is only a story, perhaps a fictional one for that matter.